13 Comments
User's avatar
Lee Muller's avatar

In the abstract reads: "Here, we show that syncytia formed by cells expressing exogenously delivered SARS-2-S exhibited a senescence-like phenotype in vitro and that SARS-2-S mRNA induced senescence phenotype in vivo."

In your post it reads: "To date, no evidence of syncytia has been identified in patients with long COVID-19 syndrome or in vaccinated people ..."

Is it correct that this is just theory that syncytia is caused by either at this point?

How was it tested in vivo?

If found in vivo, how come not in patients?

Are the long fibrous clots found in unvaxxed people as well?

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

Nobody is looking, so nobody found anything, so the authors argue that you should be looked into because of the mechanisms they found. Most tests are on inflammatory markers, which are easier to do, arguably more reliable. I think only a subset of LCs will actually have this.

Syncytia is caused by the viral infection, but highly attenuated by Omicron, first few strains it was present.

Most, if not all unvaccinated have normal clots or micro clots, the fibrous, amyloid based clots are majority in vaccinated, especially the mRNA ones. The virus causes “normal” clotting.

Expand full comment
Bird's avatar

The fun doesn't stop.

Here's my take on Syncytia via Spike connecting to HIV: https://medquotes.substack.com/p/not-new-arginine-hiv-tat-lab-tool

Expand full comment
Dingo Roberts's avatar

Interesting and I'll read it later, but I noticed your stack on heat shock protein, which might be a clue for a recent experience. Early last week, my wife had what we think might have been covid (she had anosmia. It was mild, but all symptoms were gone w/2 doses of NAC). I went for a ruck a couple of days ago and when I came back, I noticed that I had what looked to be a very mild case of miliaria crystallina or something similar. It never happened before and it wasn't even a hot day (or cold).

Expand full comment
Bird's avatar

Curious. Might as well test for Covid in case you're curious later if it were positive?

Expand full comment
Dingo Roberts's avatar

I'm curious about the potential connection, but not curious enough to test for that missing piece lol. I'll find out today if it happens again though!

Expand full comment
IceSkater40's avatar

Re: digestive cancer, I’d question if the increase of glyphosate in the food chain is contributing. May not be just one factor but many factors. Those in their 20’s have eaten GMO food for most of their lives. Maybe there is a long term risk that hasn’t been identified.

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

Just precisely within 6 months of the introduction of mRNA vaccines globally, cancer rates skyrocket. And you attribute it to glyphosate… lol. The first world uses less glyphosate than the third world btw, yet the cancer rate is unprecedented on. *check notes

First world countries. I agree it will play a role, but if you read the linked posts, I am 99% sure this is solely the mRNA.

Expand full comment
IceSkater40's avatar

Stage 4 cancer usually takes time to develop. Most answers are not as simplistic and singular sourced as we might hope. It’s very odd that it would be digestive specifically. Why would mRNA affect the digestive tract moreso than other areas? That’s the piece that doesn’t make sense - why isn’t it all cancers? This is stage 4 so the argument of it just not being detected elsewhere wouldn’t seem applicable as stage 4 is usually pretty noticeable. The age group is also odd because they were jabbed later and have a lower uptake rate across most countries in comparison to older age groups.

There are many questions raised by it being young people and not multiple age groups with similar findings. Especially when they’re a less vaccinated group compared to the others.

Or is it happening in the other groups too and just isn’t getting the same discussion levels/attention as a certain amount of cancer is expected to increase as people age?

(There is just a piece here that doesn’t make sense. I don’t have the answers, but for all the crap the mRNA can do, it seems like there are some things here that don’t fit to blame the cancer 100% on mRNA.)

Expand full comment
Cryesncoding's avatar

For those of us Conned into taking the first 2 jabs what do we do? Is this something your peptide/supplement stacks may help? Need a consolidated supplement list been working through your posts and trying to find some of the peptides for “research” I’m a biomed engineer by degree, hoping I can leverage that somehow to get ahold of some of this stuff.

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

If you want to look into the science behind it, it is all over my Substack, with the main post being in the first page, tittled "Things Hidden series".

The basics you should be doing.

- Fasting, start small 24 hours, try building towards 72 hours, don't be super aggresive, best tool you have

- Serrapeptase/Nattokinase, enzymes that dissolved unwatend proteins, Serra is a potent antiinflammatory.

- Berberine > Glucose modulator, it hinders, reverts and shifts many of the pathways the mRNA sets off, it is one of the best supplements one can take

- Glycine+NAC > I have a very recent post about it, it is obligatory, dosage should be decided by you

- Depending on your VItamin D levels, D+K2

- A lower carbohydrate diet, perhaps adding Beta HydroxyButyrate, is also of huge benefit.

These are the "obligatory" ones, everything else is optional/symptom based. I would add selenium, magnesium, and specific B vitamins just for health optimization.

Peptides are a very "high bar", I would advise only if you have damage to actually fix, or want to "maintain" health. Most people start with BPC-157 (my favorite, also have a post about it)+TB500. Highly advise you to look into BPC-157 even though those are merely the start when it comes to peptides.

Expand full comment
Cryesncoding's avatar

I will reread and look into those posts and get on this. Actually just started some fasting after reading that in one of your Substacks. Thanks for your time answering my question and research in these crazy times.

Expand full comment
Moriarty's avatar

Fasting is the best thing you can do, depending where you are health wise there are many things you can add, but I like to keep it simple. These are my approaches btw, there are many others just an FYI, but people who followed mine had great results the majority of time, or at the very least massive improvements.

Expand full comment